I've lived in D.C. for the better part of two decades. Nearly my whole adult life. Something folks aren't talking about--a giant elephant in the room--is the amount of "brand protection" going on right now.
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I don't mean fear of Trump or political persecution, although those can overlap.
When I say "brand protection," I mean the things someone in the political arena does to preserve their career longterm. It's not even necessarily "reputation protection," which is a somewhat different vibe.
"Brand protection" is more about not carrying your weight of the overall burden. Let others do the hard work. Let them take the risks of doing the obvious things that need to be done to protect democracy.
Those engaged in "brand protection" are the folks in politics who believe there's a decent chance we'll get through this, but they don't wanna spend any political capital to proactively help because they wanna come out on the other side of this thing stronger than ever, so they stay low-key.
There are a LOT of politicians, journalists, anchors, and pundits doing this right now. Most of these folks are doing at least pretty okay financially. Some of them are doing great. They have solid access, they get big party invites, they're primed for book deals and speaking gigs, promotions, etc.
And they don't wanna mess that up. They don't want this whole fascism thing to derail their timeline or deplete their capital. They've decided to wait it out. Not rock the boat. Throw a soft punch here and there but mostly keep their heads down. They want to preserve their network and their capital.
They are very consciously doing this. It's very much a choice. They're doing just enough to go along and get along and maintain their perch. You will not see them throw haymakers. If they come across what could be a big scoop, it's not enough for it to be airtight; it has to maintain their standing.
There a lot of folks in American politics and media who aren't really trying, not because of concern for their safety or triangulation toward a more important professional priority but literally because doing so would mean risking a slide down the pecking order a few notches.
So, this is all to say: you're not crazy. You're wondering if it's true that much of political media and many folks in political circles are complicit and enabling, or if you're just being too critical. And I'm here to say that you're not being too critical.
Years from now, god willing, when we get through this, there will be stories that come out about these folks covering something up or letting something slide or choosing not to do anything, and I want you to remember a lot of them didn't do it out of fear. They did it out of selfishness.
To them, it's mostly a giant game. And before Trump, it was mostly a giant game with comparatively low stakes. Who cares if you let something slide? It's not like democracy is gonna collapse. But in the Trump era, the consequences are very real, and they've decided to choose their ambition anyway.
It's why I admire folks like Bill Kristol and George Conway and Jen Rubin -- folks with whom, historically, I have not aligned on a number of things. Because they have honor. They chose democracy over their perch. They chose our country over their capital. Many of their colleagues did not.
If you look closely enough and make mental notes, you'll notice some of those who are going along to get along. It's not terribly difficult to track. Sometimes, it's embarrassingly obvious.
So, no, you're not crazy. It's definitely happening, and it's tragic.
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Part of our responsibility as citizens is to make those working for ICE as miserable as possible.
Not just non-cooperation but actively looking for any non-violent and legal way to increase their stress and anxiety.
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If your relative or neighbor or an acquaintance in your community works for ICE, make life hard for them.
Be difficult as possible. Be tedious. Be exasperating. Be creative in your disdain and pettiness.
Shun them socially. If they work for ICE, they don't get to be around you. They don't get invited to family gatherings. No neighborhood parties at your home. They no longer exist in your social network. They are invisible to you. Treat them like they don't exist.
You may have seen Pete Hegseth mock Sen. Mark Kelly's old U.S. Navy uniform and erroneously claim the medals are misplaced (they are not).
But that got me thinking: every military uniform is a walking resumé. Let's take a tour of Sen. Kelly's impressive career.
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First some quick background:
Sen. Kelly served in the U.S. Navy for 25 years. He commissioned into the branch out of the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy. He is the only graduate of USMMA to be elected to the Senate.
See that shoulder board (the black thing with gold stripes)?
That means he retired as a Captain, or an O-6. That's one grade below the admiral ranks. Fewer than 6% of U.S. Navy officers reach this rank.
"Why should I care about U.S. Space Command being transferred to Alabama? I hate the military-industrial complex."
There are a number of reasons you should care, but you really only need one.
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An ICBM launched from Russia can reach the U.S. in 27 minutes. An ICBM launched from North Korea takes about 30 minutes; some estimates have it as low as 24 min. That doesn't mean we all get a text alert on our phones saying an ICBM is gonna hit in a half hour.
In reality, most of us wouldn't get much of a heads up at all. Because the ICBM needs to be properly identified and confirmed and reconfirmed. Then it has to be imperfectly tracked. Then agencies have to be notified. Then the press. Then the rest of us.
This is being somewhat misreported, and I think it's important to correctly frame it, so that folks don't sound clownish when they're advocating for the retirement benefits of trans service members.
The Air Force is denying *early retirement* to trans service members who have served 15-18 years and are being forced out.
As most folks know, Active Duty members of the military are eligible for retirement at 20 years. This is a separate thing from medical retirement, by the way.
Yet again, we're in one of those moments when a college offers an interesting elective course, and clowns online get all huffy about it and whine that college education has become trivial and ask what job a student will get with this course.
The typical undergraduate education, a bachelor's degree, is 120 credit hours over four years. Just about every degree program at every college or university in the country leaves at least 9-12 of those credits open as free slots for other subjects a student wants to explore.
That usually works out to at least 3-4 courses over the entire four years. Some degree programs have more. Some students will opt to use those elective slots toward a double major. Some will use them toward a joint degree program (bachelors and masters) over four or five years.